>>214473354
>Bulgaria
>Turkic
>Moravia
>Celto-Slavo-German
kek
>Isn't kalács jewish?
>The name slightly varies between countries, but its general meaning originally comes from the Early Slavic root vocabulary that references the circular shape of the bread (Proto-Slavic: *kolačь, derived from "kolo").[2] Variants of "kolach" (Bulgarian, Macedonian, and Ukrainian: кoлaч, Polish: kołacz, Silesian: kołocz, Romanian: colac, Serbian: кoлaч / kolač, Slovene: kolač) are the most commonly used forms, but "kalach" (Belarusian, Russian, and Ukrainian: кaлaч, Hungarian: kalács) is also widespread. The Albanian: kulaç is cognate with all of these.
bro not sure if this is bait or schizophrenia but you're the one doing the erasing here
Slavs were here for a while